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1.
ACS Sustain Chem Eng ; 12(20): 7748-7756, 2024 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38783840

ABSTRACT

The plastic waste crisis is catalyzing change across the plastics life cycle. Central to this is increased production and application of bioplastics and biodegradable plastics. In particular, poly(hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) is a biodegradable bioplastic that can be produced from various renewable and waste feedstocks and is a promising alternative to some petrochemical-derived and non-biodegradable plastics. Despite its advantages, PHB biodegradation depends on environmental conditions, and the effects of degradation into microplastics, oligomers, and the 3-hydroxybutyrate (3-HB) monomer on soil microbiomes are unknown. We hypothesized that the ease of PHB biodegradation renders this next-generation plastic an ideal feedstock for microbial recycling into platform chemicals currently produced from fossil fuels. To demonstrate this, we report the one-pot degradation and recycling of PHB into acetone using a single strain of engineered Escherichia coli. Following strain development and initial bioprocess optimization, we report maximum titers of 123 mM acetone (7 g/L) from commercial PHB granules after 24 h fermentation at 30 °C. We further report biorecycling of an authentic sample of post-consumer PHB waste at a preparative scale. This is the first demonstration of biological recycling of PHB into a second-generation chemical, and it demonstrates next-generation plastic waste as a novel feedstock for the circular bioeconomy.

2.
JACS Au ; 3(2): 378-383, 2023 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36873680

ABSTRACT

The fundamental biology and application of bacterial exopolysaccharides is gaining increasing attention. However, current synthetic biology efforts to produce the major component of Escherichia sp. slime, colanic acid, and functional derivatives thereof have been limited. Herein, we report the overproduction of colanic acid (up to 1.32 g/L) from d-glucose in an engineered strain of Escherichia coli JM109. Furthermore, we report that chemically synthesized l-fucose analogues containing an azide motif can be metabolically incorporated into the slime layer via a heterologous fucose salvage pathway from Bacteroides sp. and used in a click reaction to attach an organic cargo to the cell surface. This molecular-engineered biopolymer has potential as a new tool for use in chemical, biological, and materials research.

3.
Chembiochem ; 23(17): e202200238, 2022 09 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35687270

ABSTRACT

Biogenic amine organocatalysts have transformed the field of synthetic organic chemistry. Yet despite their use in synthesis and to label biomolecules in vitro, amine organocatalysis in vivo has received comparatively little attention - despite the potential of such reactions to be interfaced with living cells and to modify cellular metabolites. Herein we report that biogenic amines derived from L-tyrosine catalyze the self-aldol condensation of butanal to 2-ethylhexenal - a key intermediate in the production of the bulk chemical 2-ethylhexanol - in the presence of living Escherichia coli and outperform many amine organocatalysts currently used in synthetic organic chemistry. Furthermore, we demonstrate that cell lysate from E. coli and the prolific amine overproducer Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032 catalyze this reaction in vitro, demonstrating the potential for microbial metabolism to be used as a source of organocatalysts for biocompatible reactions in cells.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli , Tyramine , Aldehydes , Amines/chemistry , Dimerization
4.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2461: 67-83, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35727444

ABSTRACT

Directed evolution of proteins is a highly effective strategy for tailoring biocatalysts to a particular application, and is capable of engineering improvements such as kcat, thermostability and organic solvent tolerance. It is recognized that large and systematic libraries are required to navigate a protein's vast and rugged sequence landscape effectively, yet their preparation is nontrivial and commercial libraries are extremely costly. To address this, we have developed SpeedyGenesXL, an automated, high-throughput platform for the production of wild-type genes, Boolean OR, combinatorial, or combinatorial-OR-type libraries based on the SpeedyGenes methodology. Together this offers a flexible platform for library synthesis, capable of generating many different bespoke, diverse libraries simultaneously.


Subject(s)
Directed Molecular Evolution , Proteins , Directed Molecular Evolution/methods , Gene Library
5.
RSC Chem Biol ; 2(4): 1073-1083, 2021 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34458824

ABSTRACT

Interfacing non-enzymatic catalysis with cellular metabolism is emerging as a powerful approach to produce a range of high value small molecules and polymers. In this review, we highlight recent examples from this promising young field. Specifically, we discuss demonstrations of living cells mediating redox processes for biopolymer production, interfacing solar-light driven chemistry with microbial metabolism, and intra- and extracellular non-enzymatic catalysis to generate high value molecules. This review highlights the vast potential of this nascent field to bridge the two disciplines of synthetic chemistry and synthetic biology for a sustainable chemical industry.

6.
Green Chem ; 23(13): 4665-4672, 2021 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34276250

ABSTRACT

Poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) is an abundant and extremely useful material, with widespread applications across society. However, there is an urgent need to develop technologies to valorise post-consumer PET waste to tackle plastic pollution and move towards a circular economy. Whilst PET degradation and recycling technologies have been reported, examples focus on repurposing the resultant monomers to produce more PET or other second-generation materials. Herein, we report a novel pathway in engineered Escherichia coli for the direct upcycling of PET derived monomer terephthalic acid into the value-added small molecule vanillin, a flavour compound ubiquitous in the food and cosmetic industries, and an important bulk chemical. After process optimisation, 79% conversion to vanillin from TA was achieved, a 157-fold improvement over our initial conditions. Parameters such as temperature, cell permeabilisation and in situ product removal were key to maximising vanillin titres. Finally, we demonstrate the conversion of post-consumer PET from a plastic bottle into vanillin by coupling the pathway with enzyme-catalysed PET hydrolysis. This work demonstrates the first biological upcycling of post-consumer plastic waste into vanillin using an engineered microorganism.

7.
Chembiochem ; 21(24): 3489-3491, 2020 12 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33201568

ABSTRACT

Synthetic biology holds great potential for sustainable chemical synthesis, yet is limited to accessing a relatively small area of chemical space. By interfacing this new technology with the versatility and scope of synthetic chemistry, the best of both worlds can be harnessed to drive a green chemical industry.


Subject(s)
Green Chemistry Technology , Synthetic Biology
8.
Chembiochem ; 21(3): 417-422, 2020 02 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31318464

ABSTRACT

The rare nonproteinogenic amino acid, meta-l-tyrosine is biosynthetically intriguing. Whilst the biogenesis of tyrosine from phenylalanine is well characterised, the mechanistic basis for meta-hydroxylation is unknown. Herein, we report the analysis of 3-hydroxylase (Phe3H) from Streptomyces coeruleorubidus. Insights from kinetic analyses of the wild-type enzyme and key mutants as well as of the biocatalytic conversion of synthetic isotopically labelled substrates and fluorinated substrate analogues advance understanding of the process by which meta-hydroxylation is mediated, revealing T202 to play an important role. In the case of the WT enzyme, a deuterium label at the 3-position is lost, whereas in in the T202A mutant 75 % retention is observed, with loss of stereospecificity. These data suggest that one of two possible mechanisms is at play; direct, enzyme-catalysed deprotonation following electrophilic aromatic substitution or stereospecific loss of one proton after a 1,2-hydride shift. Furthermore, our kinetic parameters for Phe3H show efficient regiospecific generation of meta-l-tyrosine from phenylalanine and demonstrate the enzyme's ability to regiospecifically hydroxylate unnatural fluorinated substrates.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids, Aromatic/metabolism , Phenylalanine Hydroxylase/metabolism , Amino Acids, Aromatic/chemistry , Hydroxylation , Molecular Structure , Phenylalanine Hydroxylase/chemistry , Streptomyces/enzymology
9.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 58(49): 17583-17588, 2019 12 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31573135

ABSTRACT

A tandem enzymatic strategy to enhance the scope of C-alkylation of small molecules via the in situ formation of S-adenosyl methionine (SAM) cofactor analogues is described. A solvent-exposed channel present in the SAM-forming enzyme SalL tolerates 5'-chloro-5'-deoxyadenosine (ClDA) analogues modified at the 2-position of the adenine nucleobase. Coupling SalL-catalyzed cofactor production with C-(m)ethyl transfer to coumarin substrates catalyzed by the methyltransferase (MTase) NovO forms C-(m)ethylated coumarins in superior yield and greater substrate scope relative to that obtained using cofactors lacking nucleobase modifications. Establishing the molecular determinants that influence C-alkylation provides the basis to develop a late-stage enzymatic platform for the preparation of high value small molecules.


Subject(s)
Coenzymes/chemistry , Methyltransferases/chemistry , S-Adenosylmethionine/chemistry , Adenine/chemistry , Alkylation , Amino Acid Sequence , Biocatalysis , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Protein Binding , Structure-Activity Relationship
10.
ACS Synth Biol ; 8(6): 1371-1378, 2019 06 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31132850

ABSTRACT

Directed evolution requires the creation of genetic diversity and subsequent screening or selection for improved variants. For DNA mutagenesis, conventional site-directed methods implicitly utilize the Boolean AND operator (creating all mutations simultaneously), producing a combinatorial explosion in the number of genetic variants as the number of mutations increases. We introduce GeneORator, a novel strategy for creating DNA libraries based on the Boolean logical OR operator. Here, a single library is divided into many subsets, each containing different combinations of the desired mutations. Consequently, the effect of adding more mutations on the number of genetic combinations is additive (Boolean OR logic) and not exponential (AND logic). We demonstrate this strategy with large-scale mutagenesis studies, using monoamine oxidase-N ( Aspergillus niger) as the exemplar target. First, we mutated every residue in the secondary structure-containing regions (276 out of a total 495 amino acids) to screen for improvements in kcat. Second, combinatorial OR-type libraries permitted screening of diverse mutation combinations in the enzyme active site to detect activity toward novel substrates. In both examples, OR-type libraries effectively reduced the number of variants searched up to 1010-fold, dramatically reducing the screening effort required to discover variants with improved and/or novel activity. Importantly, this approach enables the screening of a greater diversity of mutation combinations, accessing a larger area of a protein's sequence space. OR-type libraries can be applied to any biological engineering objective requiring DNA mutagenesis, and the approach has wide ranging applications in, for example, enzyme engineering, antibody engineering, and synthetic biology.


Subject(s)
Directed Molecular Evolution/methods , Gene Library , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed/methods , Proteins/genetics , Synthetic Biology/methods , Amino Acid Sequence/genetics , Catalytic Domain/genetics , Proteins/chemistry
11.
Analyst ; 143(19): 4747-4755, 2018 Sep 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30199078

ABSTRACT

Directed evolution enables the improvement and optimisation of enzymes for particular applications and is a valuable tool for biotechnology and synthetic biology. However, studies are often limited in their scope by the inability to screen very large numbers of variants to identify improved enzymes. One class of enzyme for which a universal, operationally simple ultra-high throughput (>106 variants per day) assay is not available is flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) dependent oxidases. The current high throughput assay involves a visual, colourimetric, colony-based screen, however this is not suitable for very large libraries and does not enable quantification of the relative fitness of variants. To address this, we describe an optimised method for the sensitive detection of oxidase activity within single Escherichia coli (E. coli) cells, using the monoamine oxidase from Aspergillus niger, MAO-N, as a model system. In contrast to other methods for the screening of oxidase activity in vivo, this method does not require cell surface expression, emulsion formation or the addition of an extracellular peroxidase. Furthermore, we show that fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) of large libraries derived from MAO-N under the assay conditions can enrich the library in functional variants at much higher rates than via the colony-based method. We demonstrate its use for directed evolution by identifying a new mutant of MAO-N with improved activity towards a novel secondary amine substrate. This work demonstrates, for the first time, an ultra-high throughput screening methodology widely applicable for the directed evolution of FAD dependent oxidases in E. coli.


Subject(s)
Cell Separation , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Flow Cytometry , Monoamine Oxidase/chemistry , Aspergillus niger/enzymology , Directed Molecular Evolution , Gene Library , High-Throughput Screening Assays
12.
Methods Enzymol ; 608: 59-79, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30173773

ABSTRACT

Directed evolution (DE) is a powerful tool for optimizing an enzyme's properties toward a particular objective, such as broader substrate scope, greater thermostability, or increased kcat. A successful DE project requires the generation of genetic diversity and subsequent screening or selection to identify variants with improved fitness. In contrast to random methods (error-prone PCR or DNA shuffling), site-directed mutagenesis enables the rational design of variant libraries and provides control over the nature and frequency of the encoded mutations. Knowledge of protein structure, dynamics, enzyme mechanisms, and natural evolution demonstrates that multiple (combinatorial) mutations are required to discover the most improved variants. To this end, we describe an experimentally straightforward and low-cost method for the preparation of combinatorial variant libraries. Our approach employs a two-step PCR protocol, first producing mutagenic megaprimers, which can then be combined in a "mix-and-match" fashion to generate diverse sets of combinatorial variant libraries both quickly and accurately.


Subject(s)
Directed Molecular Evolution/methods , Protein Engineering/methods , Base Sequence , Biocatalysis , DNA/genetics , DNA Primers/genetics , Directed Molecular Evolution/economics , Gene Library , Mutagenesis , Polymerase Chain Reaction/economics , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Protein Engineering/economics , Synthetic Biology/economics , Synthetic Biology/methods
13.
Chembiochem ; 18(11): 992-995, 2017 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28371017

ABSTRACT

A one-pot, two-step biocatalytic platform for the regiospecfic C-methylation and C-ethylation of aromatic substrates is described. The tandem process utilises SalL (Salinospora tropica) for in situ synthesis of S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM), followed by alkylation of aromatic substrates by the C-methyltransferase NovO (Streptomyces spheroides). The application of this methodology is demonstrated for the regiospecific labelling of aromatic substrates by the transfer of methyl, ethyl and isotopically labelled 13 CH3,13 CD3 and CD3 groups from their corresponding SAM analogues formed in situ.


Subject(s)
Methyltransferases/metabolism , S-Adenosylmethionine/metabolism , Alkylation , Aquatic Organisms , Bacteria/enzymology , Bacteria/metabolism , Biocatalysis , Heterocyclic Compounds, Fused-Ring/metabolism , Hydrocarbons, Aromatic/metabolism , Isotope Labeling , Methylation
14.
ACS Chem Biol ; 12(2): 374-379, 2017 02 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28068060

ABSTRACT

C-methylation of aromatic small molecules by C-methyltransferases (C-MTs) is an important biological transformation that involves C-C bond formation using S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) as the methyl donor. Here, two advances in the mechanistic understanding of C-methylation of the 8-position of coumarin substrates catalyzed by the C-MT NovO from Streptomyces spheroides are described. First, a crystal structure of NovO reveals the Arg116-Asn117 and His120-Arg121 motifs are essential for coumarin substrate binding. Second, the active-site His120 is responsible for deprotonation of the phenolic 7-hydroxyl group on the coumarin substrate, activating the rate-determining methyl transfer step from SAM. This work expands our mechanistic knowledge of C-MTs, which could be used in the downstream development of engineered biocatalysts for small molecule C-alkylations.


Subject(s)
Coumarins/metabolism , Catalysis , Crystallography, X-Ray , Methylation , Methyltransferases/metabolism , Molecular Structure , Novobiocin/biosynthesis , Novobiocin/chemistry , Streptomyces/metabolism , Substrate Specificity
16.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 52(27): 4906-9, 2016 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26974358

ABSTRACT

Selective, bioorthogonal and fast labeling of glycoconjugates in living cells is a major challenge for synthetic and cellular biology. Here we report the use imidazolium tagged-mannosamine derivative (ITag-Man) for the non-covalent, rapid and site-specific labeling of sialic acid containing glycoproteins using commercial N-nitrilotriacetate fluorescent reagents in a range of cell lines.


Subject(s)
Imidazoles/chemistry , Molecular Probes/chemistry , Polysaccharides/chemistry , Cell Line, Tumor , Humans
17.
Org Lett ; 18(7): 1694-7, 2016 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27001375

ABSTRACT

Aromatic ynamines or N-alkynylheteroarenes are highly reactive alkyne components in Cu-catalyzed Huisgen [3 + 2] cycloaddition ("click") reactions. This enhanced reactivity enables the chemoselective formation of 1,4-triazoles using the representative aromatic ynamine N-ethynylbenzimidazole in the presence of a competing aliphatic alkyne substrate. The unique chemoselectivity profile of N-ethynylbenzimidazole is further demonstrated by the sequential click ligation of a series of highly functionalized azides using a heterobifunctional diyne, dispelling the need for alkyne protecting groups.

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